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Members of the tomato NRC4 h-NLR family augment each other in promoting basal immunity
Year:
2023
Source of publication :
Plant Science
Authors :
Bar, Maya
;
.
Gupta, Rupali K.
;
.
Leibman-Markus, Meirav
;
.
Volume :
330
Co-Authors:

Meirav Leibman-Markus
Rupali Gupta
Silvia Schuster
Adi Avni
Maya Bar 

Facilitators :
From page:
0
To page:
0
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Total pages:
1
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Abstract:

Plants possess an efficient, two-tiered immune system to combat pathogens and pests. Several decades of research have characterized different features of these two well-known tiers, PTI and ETI (Pattern/ Effector-triggered Immunity). NLR (Nucleotide-binding domain Leucine-rich Repeat) receptors have been found to link PTI to ETI, and be required for full potentiation of plant immune responses in several systems. Intra-cellular helper-NLRs (h-NLRs) mediate ETI and have been focused on extensively in recent research.

Previously, we investigated the roles of the h-NLR SlNRC4a in tomato immunity, finding that a specific mutation in this gene results in gain of function constitutive defense activation and broad disease resistance. Deletion of the entire NRC4 clade, which contains 3 genes, can compromise tomato immunity. Here, we decided to investigate the role of an additional clade member, SlNRC4b, in basal immunity. We generated a gain of function mutant in SlNRC4b using CRISPR-Cas9, as well as a double gain of function mutant in both genes. Similarly to the slnrc4a mutant, a slnrc4b mutant also possessed increased basal immunity and broad spectrum disease resistance. The double mutant displayed additive effects in some cases, with significant increases in resistance to fungal phytopathogens as compared with each of the single mutants. Our work confirms that the NRC4 family h-NLRs are important in the plant immune system, suggesting that this gene family has the potential to be promising in targeted agricultural adaptation in the Solanaceae family, promoting disease resistance and prevention of yield loss to pathogens.

Note:
Related Files :
ETI
Nucleotide-binding-domain Leucine-rich-Repeat-receptor
pattern-triggered immunity (PTI)
Pattern/ Effector-triggered Immunity
Show More
Related Content
More details
DOI :
10.1016/j.plantsci.2023.111632
Article number:
111632
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
63518
Last updated date:
28/02/2023 15:53
Creation date:
28/02/2023 15:51
Scientific Publication
Members of the tomato NRC4 h-NLR family augment each other in promoting basal immunity
330

Meirav Leibman-Markus
Rupali Gupta
Silvia Schuster
Adi Avni
Maya Bar 

Members of the tomato NRC4 h-NLR family augment each other in promoting basal immunity

Plants possess an efficient, two-tiered immune system to combat pathogens and pests. Several decades of research have characterized different features of these two well-known tiers, PTI and ETI (Pattern/ Effector-triggered Immunity). NLR (Nucleotide-binding domain Leucine-rich Repeat) receptors have been found to link PTI to ETI, and be required for full potentiation of plant immune responses in several systems. Intra-cellular helper-NLRs (h-NLRs) mediate ETI and have been focused on extensively in recent research.

Previously, we investigated the roles of the h-NLR SlNRC4a in tomato immunity, finding that a specific mutation in this gene results in gain of function constitutive defense activation and broad disease resistance. Deletion of the entire NRC4 clade, which contains 3 genes, can compromise tomato immunity. Here, we decided to investigate the role of an additional clade member, SlNRC4b, in basal immunity. We generated a gain of function mutant in SlNRC4b using CRISPR-Cas9, as well as a double gain of function mutant in both genes. Similarly to the slnrc4a mutant, a slnrc4b mutant also possessed increased basal immunity and broad spectrum disease resistance. The double mutant displayed additive effects in some cases, with significant increases in resistance to fungal phytopathogens as compared with each of the single mutants. Our work confirms that the NRC4 family h-NLRs are important in the plant immune system, suggesting that this gene family has the potential to be promising in targeted agricultural adaptation in the Solanaceae family, promoting disease resistance and prevention of yield loss to pathogens.

Scientific Publication
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